FANTASTIC FOUR"This is our chance to make a difference" - Sue Storm - The Invisible Woman"He's stronger than any of us but he's not stronger than all of us" - Reed Richards - Mr. Fantastic"We could these powers to help people" - Johnny Storm - The Human Torch"You can't fix this, nobody can" - Ben Grimm - The Thing

Not sure if this has been posted, but this website below pretty much has some candid photos of the filming of the Wolverine, and some of the challenges some of the fx crew members had to face when building the sets and cgi etc..

FANTASTIC FOUR"This is our chance to make a difference" - Sue Storm - The Invisible Woman"He's stronger than any of us but he's not stronger than all of us" - Reed Richards - Mr. Fantastic"We could these powers to help people" - Johnny Storm - The Human Torch"You can't fix this, nobody can" - Ben Grimm - The Thing

Kenny Low at home in Willeton. Picture: Iain Gillespie/The West Australian

Not many people would be game enough to point a gun at Hollywood heavyweight Hugh Jackman in his burly Wolverine form but Willetton stuntman Kenny Low has done just that.

The 35-year-old was lucky enough to land a coveted stunt gig alongside Jackman in the second spin-off of the Marvel Comics X-Men franchise, The Wolverine, which was shot mainly in Sydney last year.

Low spent close to 14 hours straight working with the 44-year-old actor on an intense fight scene for the action flick, an experience he describes as "mind-blowing".

"I can't explain it - I was kind of speechless," he said. "It was my first time being on such a massive film set for a massive blockbuster; how I landed it I did not know.

"The scene that I had with him, it was breathtaking. Not everyone gets an opportunity like this, it was a professional experience I had with him."

But Low says the audition process was a feat in itself.

"I had to fly to Sydney to go and audition for it, I flew out on a red eye flight," he recalls. "So I got to Sydney at like six in the morning and the auditions were at two o'clock.

"There was 15 or 20 people in the audition and I was the only person from Perth, so it kind of put the pressure on me in that sense.

"The audition lasted for an hour or so, then I basically flew back to Perth the same day."

Thankfully, his whirlwind trip paid off, with Low getting a call-back a month later telling him he'd scored the job.

It saw him spend close to five weeks in Sydney shooting at Fox Studios and in Darling Harbour's iconic Chinese Gardens.

Although his only interaction with Jackman was during the 14-hour night shoot, he struck up a friendship with some of the fellow stuntmen and cast on set, including Japanese actress Rila Fukushima, who stars as Wolverine's determined sidekick, Yukio.

"She was the funniest girl, she was really outgoing," Low says.

"All the cast were really professional."

Although being a stuntman isn't a full-time job for Low just yet - he is working towards becoming a safety officer until more stunt work comes through - the 35-year-old hopes to work his movie contacts and score a stunt role in the next Avatar film.

FANTASTIC FOUR"This is our chance to make a difference" - Sue Storm - The Invisible Woman"He's stronger than any of us but he's not stronger than all of us" - Reed Richards - Mr. Fantastic"We could these powers to help people" - Johnny Storm - The Human Torch"You can't fix this, nobody can" - Ben Grimm - The Thing

While The Wolverine is currently in theaters, rumors popped up online this week that star Hugh Jackman was being courted to sign a deal worth $100 million for four more movies featuring the clawed mutant.

But EW caught up with Jackman on the Montreal set of next summer’s highly anticipated X-Men: Days of Future Past and the actor laughed off the reports. “No it’s not true,” says Jackman. “I would never do that. I’ve never done that mainly because, for the fans and for me, each time I’ve gone around there’s been a really good reason to do it and I don’t know what that reason is from here. I’m in the middle of making this and I just promoted the other and I’m really happy with the way The Wolverine came out.”

I dunno. I love Jackman as an actor...and i can't think of anyone that would be better suited to play Wolverine.

Still, he's a VERY talented actor and he's now in his prime. I don't want him to waste that by playing just one character for the next 10-15 years if you know what i mean.

Jackman's in my favorite Christopher Nolan movie: The Prestige. He's great. Outside of the X-Men franchise, I even have Real Steel and Van Helsing on DVD (acquired it for so cheap)! I'm silly. I'm excited to see his new projects.

It was (and hopefully still is) a great idea for Christian Bale to bow out of doing the Batman gig where they left it and I'm just left wondering how and if they're going to wrap this X-Men continuity. It could have ended with X:TLS...but they kept rolling along. They've got to keep making movies whether FOX wants to or not I presume to keep the rights? That's a conundrum.

Omg, I just finished listening to Les Mis! And I still lack the emotional capacity to get through the last 20 minutes of it. Sobbing over dinner right now...

I just finished watching the Oscar performance which is still bookmarked on my DVR - watching Aaron Tveit who played Enjolras on his USA show "Graceland" made me do it. Haven't watched it in a bit but there went the tears and feelings, what a performance by all, led by Hugh of course.

I just finished watching the Oscar performance which is still bookmarked on my DVR - watching Aaron Tveit who played Enjolras on his USA show "Graceland" made me do it. Haven't watched it in a bit but there went the tears and feelings, what a performance by all, led by Hugh of course.

BTW, Les Mis premieres on HBO on Aug. 31.

I've only watched my Les Mis blu-ray twice so far. I'm afraid I'll overwatch it! It's my favorite musical, I don't want to spoil it! But now I'm gonna have to watch it again this weekend. And again on HBO...

I dunno. I love Jackman as an actor...and i can't think of anyone that would be better suited to play Wolverine.

Still, he's a VERY talented actor and he's now in his prime. I don't want him to waste that by playing just one character for the next 10-15 years if you know what i mean.

IMO, he should sign the contract. For actors, its really fortunate that studios/producers want them to comeback for at least 5 films. And I feel he's not gonna lose anything if he plays Wolverine for the tenth time. He can still do other movies.

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FANTASTIC FOUR"This is our chance to make a difference" - Sue Storm - The Invisible Woman"He's stronger than any of us but he's not stronger than all of us" - Reed Richards - Mr. Fantastic"We could these powers to help people" - Johnny Storm - The Human Torch"You can't fix this, nobody can" - Ben Grimm - The Thing

IMO, he should sign the contract. For actors, its really fortunate that studios/producers want them to comeback for at least 5 films. And I feel he's not gonna lose anything if he plays Wolverine for a tenth time. He can still do other movies.

You're making it sound like he's just starting out in Hollywood. He's come back for six of these movies already. He's got an Oscar nomination, he's won an Emmy, a Golden Globe, and two Tony Awards. He's been the star of a billion-dollar superhero franchise for the last thirteen years, and he's broken house records on Broadway.

I think it's pretty well established at this point that the industry likes him well enough that he doesn't need to sign an absurd (rumored) $100 million deal to do four more of these movies just to prove it.

He gave a great answer. He was basically saying that if that deal was true and if he took it, it would look like he was only taking it because they were throwing tons of money at him to do it. He said he's always done them because there was a reason why he wanted to and because he thought it was something the fans wanted to see. If he's going to keep doing them, he wants that to still be the reason why.

You can't think that Wolverine should be the main focus of the rest of his career. That's crazy.

You're making it sound like he's just starting out in Hollywood. He's come back for six of these movies already. He's got an Oscar nomination, he's won an Emmy, a Golden Globe, and two Tony Awards. He's been the star of a billion-dollar superhero franchise for the last thirteen years, and he's broken house records on Broadway.

I think it's pretty well established at this point that the industry likes him well enough that he doesn't need to sign an absurd (rumored) $100 million deal to do four more of these movies just to prove it.

He gave a great answer. He was basically saying that if that deal was true and if he took it, it would look like he was only taking it because they were throwing tons of money at him to do it. He said he's always done them because there was a reason why he wanted to and because he thought it was something the fans wanted to see. If he's going to keep doing them, he wants that to still be the reason why.

You can't think that Wolverine should be the main focus of the rest of his career. That's crazy.

I'm not saying and thinking that Wolverine should be the main focus of his career/the rest of his career.

But with signing a 4-film contract, he's probably guaranteed to appear in more films. And since he already appeared in 7 X-Men films, this shouldn't be new or a question to him. A lot of established actors out there would love to be a part of a successful franchise.

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FANTASTIC FOUR"This is our chance to make a difference" - Sue Storm - The Invisible Woman"He's stronger than any of us but he's not stronger than all of us" - Reed Richards - Mr. Fantastic"We could these powers to help people" - Johnny Storm - The Human Torch"You can't fix this, nobody can" - Ben Grimm - The Thing